Floods and fire take toll on Suncorp's summer insurance payouts

Date: February 07 2013

Peter Hannam

LARGE-SCALE flooding across Queensland and New South Wales last month will cost Suncorp between $200 million and $220 million in claims, accounting for much of the insurer's provision for natural disasters for this financial year.

Bushfires and storms in Victoria and Tasmania in January will also total $50 million, adding to the $147 million in natural hazard claims already booked in the December half of 2012.

That means about 80 per cent of Suncorp's $520 million provision for natural disaster claims has already been taken up with five months of the financial year still to run.

Separately, the states will be watching closely how Queensland and the federal government resolve a key reconstruction issue potentially worth billions of dollars.

Last month's floods provided an opportunity to ensure that major assets such as bridges were reconstructed with greater resilience than the infrastructure that had been destroyed, said David Crisafulli, one of the state ministers leading recovery efforts.

Debate over the so-called "betterment" provisions of national relief and recovery arrangements had flared after assets newly rebuilt after the Queensland floods of 2011 had been damaged or destroyed in the latest inundation - with work completed just weeks ago in some cases near Bundaberg.

The floods "provided a window of how absurd our practise has been in replacing infrastructure" destroyed in a disaster, Mr Crisafulli said. "It's in the interest of the federal government - and everybody else - to get it right the first time."

A teleconference on Tuesday between Joe Ludwig, the federal minister appointed to assist the Queensland floods recovery, though, appears to have reached a breakthrough over the guidelines for assistance.

"There was a genuine willingness from Senator Joe Ludwig to stand shoulder to shoulder with the state," Mr Crisafulli said.

Under existing rules, the federal government will typically contribute 75 per cent of the cost of replacing assets lost in a disaster, with the state paying the rest. Should the road or other public asset be improved to increase its tolerance for future extreme events, the federal and state government split the cost - a result that has often proved too costly or difficult to achieve.

"We will work with Queensland to develop and deliver a revised National Partnership Agreement that meets the needs of the state to rebuild, be stronger, and get back on its feet," Senator Ludwig said.

"There is some flexibility in guidelines and the National Partnership Agreement will help us fast-track assistance, cut through red tape and get the right assistance to where it is needed."

The outcome of the revisions will no doubt be followed closely in other state capitals.

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